Quantifying Operational Constraints of Low-Latency Telerobotics for Planetary Surface Operations
Benjamin J. Mellinkoff, Matthew M. Spydell, Wendy Bailey, and Jack O., Burns

TL;DR
This paper investigates the operational constraints of low-latency telerobotics for lunar surface exploration, quantifying bandwidth and latency effects on exploration efficiency through simulated experiments.
Contribution
It identifies critical bandwidth and latency thresholds affecting telerobotic exploration and provides experimental data on their impact in lunar analog environments.
Findings
Effective exploration requires a minimum of 5 fps video frame rate.
A 2.6-second delay increases exploration time by 150%.
Latency significantly hampers real-time telerobotic operations.
Abstract
NASA's SLS and Orion crew vehicle will launch humans to cislunar space to begin the new era of space exploration. NASA plans to use the Orion crew vehicle to transport humans between Earth and cislunar space where there will be a stationed habitat known as the Deep Space Gateway (DSG). The proximity to the lunar surface allows for direct communication between the DSG and surface assets, which enables low-latency telerobotic exploration. The operational constraints for telerobotics must be fully explored on Earth before being utilized on space exploration missions. We identified two constraints on space exploration using low-latency surface telerobotics and attempts to quantify these constraints. A constraint associated with low-latency surface telerobotics is the bandwidth available between the orbiting command station and the ground assets. The bandwidth available will vary during…
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